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Matt was born and raised outside Boston, and after his hockey career fizzled at age 13 he decided to become a writer. Now he covers retail and all things shopping for DailyFinance, where he’s constantly finding new ways to help readers save money. He’s as thrifty as you can possibly be while living in New York City, and the only time he’s ever made an impulse purchase was when he bought himself one of those singing fish for $20 a few years ago. He still hasn’t forgiven himself.

Office Max
"Christmas Creep" has officially been taken to a new extreme.

After years of watching Black Friday sales move into Thanksgiving week and Christmas commercials appear earlier and earlier in the year, OfficeMax (OMX) decided to just go ahead and hold its first holiday sale in May.

The retailer sent around an email to subscribers this week announcing a countdown to its "Halfway to Cyber Monday" sale. The sale -- first noticed by Consumerist -- has now begun, promising online discounts of up to 75% and a printable coupon for $10 off $40. It's plugging the sale with the tagline, "Deals so hot, it's like Cyber Monday."

Cyber Monday, of course, is e-commerce's answer to Black Friday, and takes place every year on the Monday after Thanksgiving. Evidently the idea here is that Cyber Monday is six months away (though that's not exactly true -- Thanksgiving doesn't come until Nov. 28 this year, so Cyber Monday technically doesn't come until Dec. 2).

Of course, this doesn't mean that OfficeMax is actually trying to kick off the Christmas shopping season in May. This is obviously nothing more than a marketing gimmick attempting to play off the increasingly popular Cyber Monday brand, so we don't expect we're going to see OfficeMax running Christmas sales from now until Dec. 25. (With that said, some companies are indeed talking about Christmas already -- last week, TicketMaster started selling tickets for the annual Radio City Music Hall Christmas spectacular.)

This isn't the first time a company has tried to use the "Cyber" brand well before Christmas: Last year, Costco declared a week in August as "Cyber Summer." If OfficeMax's promotion is successful, we fear that every online sale may soon deem itself "cyber" and run the word into the ground.

Matt Brownell is the consumer and retail reporter for DailyFinance. You can reach him at Matt.Brownell@teamaol.com, and follow him on Twitter at @Brownellorama.